This Picture Suckshttps://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com
and so do yoursThu, 20 Jul 2017 00:05:57 +0000enhourly1http://wordpress.com/https://s2.wp.com/i/buttonw-com.pngThis Picture Suckshttps://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com
High-budget douchebaggeryhttps://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2011/01/17/high-budget-douchebaggery/
https://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2011/01/17/high-budget-douchebaggery/#respondMon, 17 Jan 2011 13:55:11 +0000http://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/?p=127]]>In the past, I have written about the pitfalls of faking film frames. Now, you’d think that kind of stuff doesn’t happen in the high budget world of big-name productions. Of course, you’d be wrong. Mr. Hudson’s Supernova is a great example of bad ideas going wrong. They managed to keep the frame numbers flowing, but forgot that Kodak 400TX is a black and white stock.

I wrote this in 2009, might as well publish it.

]]>https://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2011/01/17/high-budget-douchebaggery/feed/0St. Ansel#20. Sob Storieshttps://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2011/01/05/sob-stories/
https://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2011/01/05/sob-stories/#respondWed, 05 Jan 2011 16:19:34 +0000http://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/?p=135]]>Photographers, when you comment on something you don’t like in one of the images, will often reply with, “yeah, I know but…”. From their mouths comes a tale of exactly why they didn’t do what they know they should have done. Be it not messing up the exposure, composing better, not missing the moment, getting a better expression, whatever. Additionally, many photographs come with stories attached, tales of how our intrepid shutterbug braved the snow, freezing temperatures and harsh topographical conditions to get their image. There is really only one honest reply to these explanations and tales:

I don’t care.

Truth be told, nobody really cares, even if we pretend we do. The reason is as simple as it is difficult for online photographers to grasp: The image is the only thing that matters.

Look, there are only two kinds of images we see: those that we like and those that we don’t like. Those that we like, we already like. We’re not going to like them more just because they have a story attached, just like I wouldn’t like my TV any more if I knew the guy who put it together only had one hand. Who cares, I’m already sold. And images we don’t like… well, we just don’t like them. The greatest story in the world isn’t going to change what’s on the print. It’ll be a great story with a shitty picture to go along with it.

That’s the thing, it’s really all about the image. This is photography, it’s not mixed media, it’s not an art installation with piss-stained rags lit by a laser shining through a pig’s head. It’s the image, the print, the jpg, the whatever. Build a museum around a shitty picture, and it’ll still suck.

So stop it. Stop trying to defend your work, telling sob stories of how the model wasn’t cool, how you couldn’t get the lights to fire, of how it was so cold outside and whaaaaaaaaaa. Stop showing subpar work and making excuses for it when someone calls you out on it. Be better than that, be a photographer whose work you’d actually like to look at. It’s a lot harder than it seems.

]]>https://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2011/01/05/sob-stories/feed/0St. AnselSorta back, but not really.https://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2010/10/22/sorta-back-but-not-really/
https://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2010/10/22/sorta-back-but-not-really/#commentsFri, 22 Oct 2010 21:03:39 +0000http://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/?p=132]]>For some reason or another, I’ve started looking at the photography reddit. Let me say that those people make the RFF crowd look like a group of well adjusted photographers, who hold a healthy interest in their craft. ]]>https://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2010/10/22/sorta-back-but-not-really/feed/1St. AnselThe Pose – Dude Editionhttps://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2009/11/22/the-pose-dude-edition/
https://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2009/11/22/the-pose-dude-edition/#commentsSun, 22 Nov 2009 19:31:07 +0000http://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/?p=129]]>I’ve written of the pose, now here it is as you hope to never see it again:]]>https://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2009/11/22/the-pose-dude-edition/feed/2St. AnselNikon D300s and D3000 Press Release Reviewhttps://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2009/07/30/nikon-d300s-and-d3000-press-release-review/
https://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2009/07/30/nikon-d300s-and-d3000-press-release-review/#commentsThu, 30 Jul 2009 11:12:22 +0000http://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/?p=125]]>Today, or possibly yesterday as I don’t care enough to check, Nikon announced two cameras. Since reading a press release is all I actually need to do to write a review in 2009, here we go.

First we have the Nikon D3000, Nikon’s delayed response to the Canon 1000D. That adds another camera to the surprisingly lucrative aprox. $500 market. Honestly, I had a heavy lunch and am too lazy to study the specs, but it looks like every single cheap DSLR camera out on the market. Big LCD screen, long battery life, picture styles, small, etc. There really is only one selling point, and that it is it’s a Nikon and it’s gonna cost $500 retail. Oh, and the shutter is rated for 100k, and that’s pretty freaking sweet.

Says the battery is rated for 550 shots per charge, but that’s with a VR lens with the flash fired at full power every other shot. I could probably get 1000 shots out of it the way I shoot.

Then we have the Nikon D300s, which is a camera I remember telling people would probably not come out. This is an excellent reason why you shouldn’t read my reviews.

Now, the D300s is a lot cooler, giving you 7fps without one of those lame grips, better AF and HD video for $1500 (guessing). I wrote about HD video in DSLRs (have never used it, am a huge fan) in my 500D press review. It also has dual slots, which was previously the domain of pro cameras of lore. Looks like a solid upgrade, if this were a car we’d be calling this a facelift. Probably not a worthy upgrade if you have a D300, but if you’re looking for a crop Nikon, this is the one to get.

I would probably be all over this if I wanted a crop camera and had Nikon glass. I don’t, thank god.

]]>https://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2009/07/30/nikon-d300s-and-d3000-press-release-review/feed/1St. AnselCreative Commons and the Case of the Hotel Pool Spermhttps://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2009/07/13/creative-commons-and-the-case-of-the-hotel-pool-sperm/
https://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2009/07/13/creative-commons-and-the-case-of-the-hotel-pool-sperm/#commentsMon, 13 Jul 2009 19:25:14 +0000http://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/?p=122]]>In the past, I’ve written on how fucked up Creative Commons licenses are for photographers. Thanks to my eFriends and the internets, I just found a great example of what I was talking about.

The girl in the picture isn’t Magdalena Kwiatkowska, it’s a self-portrait by flickr user santiana, who forever gets to have her image linked to terms like “teen pregnant from sperm in hotel swimming pool”. NJ.com did nothing wrong, santiana used a CC license, as god intended.

]]>https://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2009/07/13/creative-commons-and-the-case-of-the-hotel-pool-sperm/feed/5St. AnselClouds, the low-hanging fruithttps://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2009/07/04/clouds-the-low-hanging-fruit/
https://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2009/07/04/clouds-the-low-hanging-fruit/#commentsSat, 04 Jul 2009 11:48:42 +0000http://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/?p=120]]>The three most photogenic subjects to photograph in the world are babies, flowers and clouds. Of there three, babies require special access – someone has to let your virgin ass photograph their kid. Flowers require you to pay, or at least wait for spring or summer here in the part of the northern hemisphere where you aren’t allowed to either honor kill your sister or sleep with her. Now clouds, they’re free, they’re year round, just point your camera at the sky and fire away.

Ah yes, but what can you do if you have a flat sky, where nothing’s going on? You use photoshop, baby. Shot with a budget-busting $100, 4 year old digital point and shoot, look at what you can get with two moves of a slider in potatoshop:
Bam! From boring to dramatic kitsch in a couple seconds!

]]>https://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2009/07/04/clouds-the-low-hanging-fruit/feed/1St. AnselCompositionhttps://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2009/06/08/composition/
https://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2009/06/08/composition/#commentsMon, 08 Jun 2009 22:54:38 +0000http://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/?p=116]]>There are a lot of shitty sites about photography on the internet, I’ve highlighted a couple of them, but there are a couple of really decent ones. Luminous Landscape is one of them, and it’s pretty much the only place on the internet where you can talk about digital MF with people who’ve done more than read a PhaseOne press release.

I don’t like John Paul Caponigro. His dad, Paul Caponigro, is an incredible artist, easily one of the strongest expressive landscape shooters ever. John Paul is a photoshop jockey who could, on a good day, clean his father’s darkroom. All that said, he managed to write a pretty decent piece on composition for LL.

Composition is a goddamn trap for beginning photographers. People look at their shots and – doesn’t matter if they know what the hell they’re talking about – say stuff like, “oh yeah, I like the composition in this one.” Uh, yeah. Anyway, composition is simply order. It’s the act of ordering the objects and tones of a scene. That’s all there is to it.
Here’s how to not learn composition: rules. Rules of thirds, rules of fifths, diagonals. All that crap just makes you take up knitting. Sure, it’s easy to write articles about them, but they’re… what’s the technical term… utter shit. When you’re taking a picture, you don’t want to be remembering rules, you want to be taking a goddamn picture.

My recommendation is a lot simpler than rules, but a lot harder because it requires effort, and you know nobody on the internet wants to do that. Go to a library, get some albums of paintings, stuff by classical painters, and trace them – just like this this example from JPC. Tracing paper, a soft pencil and off you go. Do it every evening for 30 minutes for a week. Do it a hundred, two hundred times. You will learn to see composition, through the hand to the eye, as many a teacher has said.

Oh, and shoot black and white for a while, color will just mess with your head at first, and it’ll hide your fuckups. Now that’s all fun and good when you’re trying to bullshit your way into a commission, but when you’re learning, it misses the point.

Why painting and not HCB, Adams or Newton? First, if you want to learn to copy a photographer’s style, that’s a great way to do it. Second, nothing in a painting is there by accident. Everything, every line, bird, detail, shadow, cloud, everything was put there with a purpose. Just like in your photographs.

]]>https://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2009/06/08/composition/feed/1St. Ansel#19. Open Sourcehttps://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2009/05/25/19-open-source/
https://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2009/05/25/19-open-source/#respondMon, 25 May 2009 08:21:35 +0000http://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/?p=112]]>Spring is in the air and, as such, the idea of sitting at a computer for days on end seems about as much fun as getting hit by a car. It’s hard to be angry when the sun is shining and the breeze is blowing, so the blog has fallen into disrepair. Can’t promise it’ll be better before summer’s over.

Supposedly, 2009 is the year of the Lulnix desktop (like each of the 15 years before it) but like a hot 35 year old virgin, we all know it’s bullshit. Let’s face it, when your market penetration falls below a typical statistical margin of error, it’s hard to get developers excited by your system. That’s why the answer to most open source photography questions is: Get a Mac.Now, I’m not saying OS X is better than any desktop system out there (it is), or that open source operating systems (OSOSes) on the desktop suck (they do). What I’m saying is, both photography software that runs on open source OSes and open source image editing software break the laws of physics by both sucking and blowing at the same time.

The only half-decent app that runs on OSOSes is called Bibble. Bibble is still at 4.10, which wouldn’t be hilarious if Bibble 5 wasn’t supposed to come out in 2008. Right now 4.10 is a year old, which means if you own any camera released in the past 12 months (5D mkII, A900, D3X, D5000, etc) you’re SOL. The pro version comes in at $195, so for a whopping $50 less than Lightroom, you get a year old product with less support from a smaller company. Hey, but it runs on Linux! METAL BEAR POWER FIST PUMP! There’s also Lightzone, which I actually like, or rather I would like if it didn’t run like a 3 legged pig on a dual core system with 8GB of RAM. Developers, here’s a hint: Java isn’t for everything.

Open source users often fall into a reality distortion field that Steve Jobs could only dream about. You’ll hear things like, “I don’t need Photoshop, I have GIMP.” You’re not fooling anybody dude, GIMP is busted. There’s no comparison. Adjustment layers, 16-bit editing, CMYK? Hurrrr? Same thing with dcraw UFRaw in comparison to ACR, it’s missing a couple features. Like being able to zoom in… or sharpen. It’s all a bunch of hacked solutions to problems that have already been solved.

Do yourself a favor, get a copy of Windows, get a copy of Lightroom or even Photoshop Elements. Pretend that your time is worth more than nothing, and that shooting is more fun than post-processing your pics hours at a time. You might start to believe it.

]]>https://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2009/05/25/19-open-source/feed/0St. Ansel#18. Weekly photo assignmentshttps://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2009/04/30/18-weekly-photo-assignments/
https://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/2009/04/30/18-weekly-photo-assignments/#commentsThu, 30 Apr 2009 00:04:56 +0000http://thispicturesucks.wordpress.com/?p=110]]>Back when I started shooting digital, I thought photo assignments were awesome. The concept is kind of exciting, isn’t it? You get a topic to shoot, usually just a word, maybe two. Just like a real grown-up photographer! Then at the end of the week, your peers vote on the best pic and people go, “everybody turned in amazing work!” or some other crap nobody really believes.

The fail is two-fold with this one. First of all, there’s pretty much only one kind of photographer who works this way: the stock photographer. If you want make a career of taking boring pictures with no budgets of TFP models, then this is perfect for you. It is a great way to figure out how to illustrate simple concepts, like “failure” and “despair”, in a banal and obvious manner.

It keeps getting better, since your weekly contest jury is made up of people who thought that this shit was a good idea in the first place. You know that’s who I want rating my work, the dude I’ve been voting down for 3 weeks because he keeps posting color-toned flower macros.

Instead of shooting a weekly assignment, consider shooting one that last a month, three months, a year. Consider getting more than one shot out of it. Consider making it a coherent series of images, like one you’d see in a book, a magazine, possibly on the walls of a gallery. Or just spend another week trying to illustrate “boredom”.